On 11/22/10 9:37 AM, Steven Schveighoffer wrote:
On Sun, 21 Nov 2010 23:56:17 -0500, Andrei Alexandrescu
<seewebsiteforem...@erdani.org> wrote:

If you want to work with arrays, use a[0] to access the front, a[$ -
1] to access the back, and a = a[1 .. $] to chop off the first element
of the array. It is not AT ALL natural to mix those with a.front,
a.back etc. It is not - why? because std.range defines them with
specific meanings for arrays in general and for arrays of characters
in particular. If you submit to use std.range's abstraction, you
submit to using it the way it is defined.

I want to use char[] as an array. I want to sort the array, how do I do
this? (assume array.sort as a property is deprecated, as it should be)

Why do you want to sort an array of char?

Andrei

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